Democrat Linda Belcher won a special election in a deep-red Kentucky district on Tuesday night where President Trump dominated in the 2016 presidential election by a whopping 50 point margin, according to a local reporter on the scene. The special election in Kentucky’s House District 49 pitted Belcher against Republican Rebecca Johnson. House District 49 voted overwhelmingly for Trump, by a margin of 72 percent to 23 percent. However, Belcher has previously represented the district and narrowly lost a reelection bid in 2016 by less than 200 votes. Belcher’s win marks the 37th legislative seat changing hands from Republican to Democrat since Trump’s inauguration.

Indeed. This trend has been running unbroken since the election in Virginia.

It has been pointed out to him three times now in this thread. The thick clown still can't see it.

We're both saying the same thing, except you think there will be a "bloodbath" for the GOP. Yes, they may lose a lot of seats.

The party in the Exec historically loses seats, but you think the Repubs will get pounded. My point (again) is that they may indeed get pounded in the mid-terms but they are 9 months away and (again) that's a long time in electoral politics in the US.

Looks like the Dems are going to pull off another upset in a district Drumpf carried by 20%.

All eyes on absentee ballots in Pennsylvania

All eyes are now on absentee ballots in the race for Pennsylvania's 18th Congressional District, where Democrat Conor Lamb and Republican Rick Saccone are currently neck and neck.Results from Allegheney County put Democrat Conor Lamb ahead with a 847 vote count lead once the absentee ballots there were accounted for.

The counties that still need to count the absentee ballots include Greene, Washington and Westmoreland.

Washington County elections director Larry Spahr, who earlier in the night said absentee ballots would be counted Wednesday, announced that county officials will count 1,195 absentee ballots late Tuesday night instead.

Saccone, speaking to his supporters Tuesday night, said he isn't giving up.

"We are still fighting the fight. It's not over yet," he said.

Republicans are hoping to prevent the district that Donald Trump won handily from falling into Democratic hands.

Lamb and Saccone are in a close race to replace former GOP Rep. Tim Murphy, who resigned after allegedly urging a woman he was having an affair with to have an abortion.

A Monmouth University poll released Monday showed Lamb, a 33-year-old Marine veteran and former prosecutor, with a slight lead among likely voters over the 60-year-old Saccone.

A Lamb win tonight would signal that the GOP is in danger even in districts considered safe for Republicans, raising Democratic hopes of capturing the House and maybe the Senate in November. A Republican loss could lead to more House members retiring rather than running into headwinds in re-election bids. Democrats, meanwhile, would look to replicate Lamb's success in working-class districts with similar demographics.

A Republican official told CNN that President Trump, who is raising money with GOP donors in Beverly Hills, has been asking for updates throughout the evening and is pleasantly surprised by the narrow margin.

"This isn't a blowout — for now, we'll happily take it," one GOP official said.

One GOP source, who was worried about a "bloodbath" earlier tonight, said Republicans are more hopeful at the moment but still worried.

Another source pointed to GOP strength in absentee ballots as a hopeful sign.

Earlier in the evening, before it became clear the results would be so close, several Republican officials told CNN they were expecting Saccone to lose. Party officials were placing the blame squarely on Saccone's campaign but also on Trump's Saturday rally, which some Republicans believe helped drive up Democratic turnout.

Republicans have spent more than $10 million to prevent a defeat in the district, which Trump won in 2016 by 20 percentage points. Trump remains popular in the district -- 51% of likely voters there approve of his job performance while 47% disapprove, the Monmouth poll out Monday showed.